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BASIC PACKAGE

Name Search (STATE & FEDERAL LEVEL)

STATE Filing Of LLC,

CORP OR NON PROFIT(All states)

EIN

DOMAIN REGISTRATION

BUSINESS BIBLE

$650

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PREMIUM PACKAGE

Name Search(STATE & FEDERAL LEVEL)

STATE Filing Of LLC, CORP OR NON PROFIT(All states)

501C3 TAX EXEMPTION FOR ALL NON-PROFITS

EIN

VIRTUAL ADDRESS SETUP

WEBSITE DOMAIN

411 LISTING

DUNS NUMBER

DIY BUILD BUSINESS CREDIT BOOK

BUSINESS BIBLE

$995

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PLATINUM PACKAGE

Name Search(STATE & FEDERAL LEVEL)

STATE Filing Of LLC, CORP OR NON PROFIT

(All states)

EIN

VIRTUAL ADDRESS SETUP

WEBSITE DOMAIN

PROFESSIONAL EMAIL

411 LISTING

GOOGLE BUSINESS LISTING

DUNS NUMBER

BUILD BUSINESS CREDIT

TAX PLANNING (1YEAR)

BUSINESS BIBLE

$1995

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

What's the difference between an LLC and a corporation?

Both protect owners so they're not personally on the hook for business liabilities or debts. But, key differences include how they're owned (LLCs have one or more individual owners and corporations have shareholders) and maintained (corporations generally have more formal record-keeping and reporting requirements). Even though LLCs are considered easier to start and maintain, investors tend to prefer corporations

What's the difference between a C corporation and an S corporation?

The way you're taxed. C corporation income is taxed twice—the business pays taxes on its net income, and then the shareholders also pay taxes on the profits they receive. With S corporation income, only the shareholders pay taxes on profits received.

 

What's the main difference between a sole proprietorship and an LLC?

Personal liability protection. An LLC protects owners from being personally on the hook for business liabilities or debts. A sole proprietorship doesn't.

 

How are different business types taxed?

LLCs, S corporations, and sole proprietorships are taxed once on profits received. C corporations are taxed twice; the business pays taxes at the corporate level, and shareholders pay taxes on income received.

 

Which business types give me personal liability protection?

LLCs and corporations. You don't get personal liability protection with sole proprietorships or DBAs.

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